Space is becoming crowded and risks of collision -- whether with satellites or space debris -- are not new.
I am so tired of hearing this bullshit repeated as if everyone is so stupid they can't see through the blatant bullshit. Space is anything but crowded. There is far more space in orbit than all the space in all the oceans of the world. It is hard to get anything up there and nearly impossible to keep it up there. Space debris is not a real threat to anything. Micro meteorites are far more of a threat.
This is 100% about china's control of the internet. They don't want any holes in their dragnet. Everyone always spouts the bullshit about VPNs but the reality is they control those too and use them to spy on the people who think they are cheating the system.
Because you went to space or are working in a field even remotely related to it?
I'm familiar with the propaganda you posted. Do you understand that what they did there is take every tiny thing they could find and portrayed it as the size of a small city? Do you understand how manipulative and unrealistic that is?
If there is only 1 object and you blow its size up to be bigger that earth suddenly it looks pretty crowded up there.
Compare the size of one of those dots to a city on that planet. How many millions of times bigger did they have to make the problem to scare you? Why are you so easily manipulated?
The "propaganda" I posted features an astronaut among other space professionals, an astronaut who got confronted with the problem obviously
So, again what are your credentials? On what elements do you base your "expertise", other than arbitrary conjectures? Is there any credible source supporting your claim at least, no? https://search.brave.com/search?q=space+debris+hoax&source=desktop I ask because you seem to be the only one making that claim, and also because a nobody telling me nuclear bomb don't exist, based on nothing but his fantasies, isn't going to be very convincing...
So?
https://airandspace.si.edu/explore-and-learn/multimedia/detail.cfm?id=6572
https://pic8.co/sh/OOIUEg.jpeg
This image shows the radiator section (rear end) of the Wide Field Planetary Camera II (WFPC2), installed on the Hubble Space Telescope. During the various Hubble servicing missions, astronauts noticed tiny dimples and dents in the radiator – the result of space debris. After more than15 years of exposure to space, this surface became a record of the accumulation of such debris in low Earth orbit. Naturally, NASA wanted to evaluate the amount and nature of this debris, and so after the camera was returned to Earth the impact sites were analyzed. The largest core samples left holes about 30 mm in diameter, but the debris particles were less than a mm in size. The analysis is ongoing.
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